Читаем The League of Frightened Men полностью

I carried my loot to where I had parked the roadster on Forty-fifth Street, put it on the seat beside me, and headed downtown. Having it there made me feel like we were getting somewhere. Not that I knew where, but Wolfe either did or thought he did. I didn't very often get really squeamish about Wolfe's calculations; I worried, all right, and worked myself into a stew when it seemed to me that he was overlooking a point that was apt to trip us up, but down in my heart I nearly always knew that anything he was missing would turn out in the end to be something we didn't need. In this case I wasn't so sure, and what made me not so sure was that damn cripple. There was something in the way the others spoke about him, in the way he looked and acted that Monday night, in the way those warnings sounded, that gave me an uneasy idea that for once Wolfe might be underrating a guy. That wasn't like him, for he usually had a pretty high opinion of the people whose fate he was interfering with. I was thinking that maybe the mistake he had made in this case was in reading Chapin's books. He had definite opinions about literary merit, and possibly having rated the books pretty low, he had done the same for the man who wrote them. If he was rating Chapin low, I was all ready to fall in on the other side. For instance, here beside me was the typewriter on which the warnings had been written, all three of them, no doubt about it, and it was a typewriter to which Paul Chapin had had easy and constant access, but there was no way in the world of proving that he had done it. Not only that, it was a typewriter to which most of the other Persons connected with the business had •had access too. No, I thought, as far as Writing those warnings went, nearly -anything you might say about Chapin would be underrating him.

When I got to the house it wasn't eleven o'clock yet. I carried the typewriter to the hall and put it down on the stand while I removed my hat and coat. There was another hat and coat there; I looked at 1 them; they weren't FarrelPs; I didn't recognize them. I went to the kitchen to ask Fritz who the visitor was, but he wasn't there, upstairs probably, so I went back and got the typewriter and took it to the office. But I didn't get more than six feet inside the door before I stopped.

Sitting there turning over the pages of a book, with his stick leaning against the arm of his chair, was Paul Chapin.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Дом на полпути
Дом на полпути

Эллери Квин – псевдоним двух кузенов: Фредерика Дэнни (1905-1982) и Манфреда Ли (1905-1971). Их перу принадлежат 25 детективов, которые объединяет общий герой, сыщик и автор криминальных романов Эллери Квин, чья известность под стать популярности Шерлока Холмса и Эркюля Пуаро. Творчество братьев-соавторов в основном укладывается в русло классического детектива, где достаточно запутанных логических ходов, ложных следов, хитроумных ловушек.Эллери Квин – не только псевдоним двух писателей, но и действующее лицо их многих произведений – профессиональный сочинитель детективных историй и сыщик-любитель, приходящий на помощь своему отцу, инспектору полиции Ричарду Квину, когда очередной криминальный орешек оказывается тому не по зубам.

Эллери Квин , Эллери Куин

Детективы / Классический детектив / Классические детективы